“最佳做法在医疗保健决策中的作用”特刊序言

IF 2.2 Q3 ENGINEERING, INDUSTRIAL
L. Militello, M. Weiner
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In this issue, Falzer’s article provides an in-depth discussion of the concept of decision making in this context and the unintended negative consequences of evidence-based recommendations. This article became the centerpiece for this special issue; commentators were asked to react to Falzer’s article. Because the topic of EBM and its impact on decision making and the quality of health care falls at the intersection of at least two important scientific disciplines (EBM and NDM), perspectives of experts who have been thinking about these issues in various contexts and from various traditions are important. We have been fortunate to obtain commentaries from a range of thought leaders representing both EBM and NDM for this special issue. As we reviewed the commentaries, it became clear that there is sometimes disagreement about what EBM really is and what it implies for health care. “Critics” tend to view EBM narrowly, whereas “proponents” have a broader and more multidimensional view of EBM. It is also worth noting that many commentators draw strong links between EBM and the “best practices regimen” (i.e., initiatives and interventions that define the quality of decision making by conformance to evidence-based practices). 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It is also worth noting that many commentators draw strong links between EBM and the “best practices regimen” (i.e., initiatives and interventions that define the quality of decision making by conformance to evidence-based practices). Other contributors note that these are distinct concepts, suggesting that while managed care, health services research, implementation research, and the best practices regimen are directly influenced by classical decision theory, EBM might be characterized as restoring decision making to its “rightful place.” In some ways, this confusion rooted in the language can be seen as encouraging: There might not be as much disagreement as it appears on the surface, if one begins to discuss concepts and approaches rather than relying on labels. Nonetheless, important points of divergence are found in the commentaries. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

讨论最佳实践在医疗保健决策中的作用。讨论始于2016年4月发表的一篇挑衅性文章,Devorah Klein、David Woods、Gary Klein和Shawna Perry在文章中提出了“我们能相信最佳实践吗?”(Klein、Woods、Klein和Perry,2016)。Klein和她的同事强调了使用循证医学(EBM)支持临床护理的一些挑战,并建议将自然主义决策(NDM)作为应对这些挑战的重要视角。此后不久,Paul Falzer(2018)提交了一份深化和扩展讨论的手稿,指出这些挑战在医疗保健界是众所周知的,并指出有效的解决方案仍然难以捉摸。在本期文章中,Falzer的文章深入讨论了在此背景下的决策概念以及循证建议的意外负面后果。这篇文章成为本期特刊的核心;评论员被要求对法尔泽的文章作出反应。由于循证医学及其对决策和医疗质量的影响是至少两个重要科学学科(循证医学和新医学)的交叉点,因此,在不同背景和不同传统中思考这些问题的专家的观点很重要。我们很幸运地获得了代表EBM和NDM的一系列思想领袖对本期特刊的评论。当我们回顾评论时,很明显,有时对循证医学的真正含义及其对医疗保健的含义存在分歧。“批评者”倾向于狭隘地看待循证医学,而“支持者”则对循证医学有着更广泛、更多维的看法。同样值得注意的是,许多评论家将循证医学与“最佳实践方案”(即通过遵守循证实践来定义决策质量的举措和干预措施)联系起来。其他贡献者指出,这些都是不同的概念,表明虽然管理护理、医疗服务研究、实施研究和最佳实践方案直接受到经典决策理论的影响,但循证医学可能被描述为将决策恢复到其“合法地位”,这种植根于语言中的困惑可以被视为令人鼓舞的:如果一个人开始讨论概念和方法,而不是依赖标签,那么可能不会有表面上那么多的分歧。尽管如此,在评注中还是发现了重要的分歧点。尽管许多人会同意循证医学从来没有打算限制临床医生的自由裁量权和折扣专业知识,但对于如何实施循证医学,人们几乎没有达成一致。我们邀请您欣赏以下评论。海恩斯是1992年阐明循证医学愿景的工作组成员(循证医学工作组,1992年),他澄清说,“遵循原则”、“最佳实践方案”和“转导模型”不是循证医学的一部分。此外,循证医学从一开始就被认为是临床医生和患者决策的众多投入之一。然而,他警告说,在没有实证验证这种方法对实际实践环境中的结果产生积极影响的情况下,不要采用NDM实践和应用。他鼓励NDM科学、知识翻译、传播和实施的倡导者之间的合作。在今天的讨论中,Schneider提醒我们更早的相关讨论,790084 EDMXXX10.1177/15553343418790084认知工程与决策杂志“最佳实践在医疗保健决策中的作用”2018前言
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preface to the Special Issue on “The Role of Best Practices in Health Care Decision Making”
cussing the Role of Best Practices in Health Care Decision Making. The discussion began with a provocative article published in April 2016 in which Devorah Klein, David Woods, Gary Klein, and Shawna Perry raised the question, “Can we trust best practices?” (Klein, Woods, Klein, & Perry, 2016). Klein and her colleagues highlighted some of the challenges associated with using evidence-based medicine (EBM) to support clinical care and suggested naturalistic decision making (NDM) as an important perspective for addressing these challenges. Soon thereafter, Paul Falzer (2018) submitted a manuscript deepening and extending the discussion, pointing out that these challenges are well known in the health care community, and noting that effective solutions remain elusive. In this issue, Falzer’s article provides an in-depth discussion of the concept of decision making in this context and the unintended negative consequences of evidence-based recommendations. This article became the centerpiece for this special issue; commentators were asked to react to Falzer’s article. Because the topic of EBM and its impact on decision making and the quality of health care falls at the intersection of at least two important scientific disciplines (EBM and NDM), perspectives of experts who have been thinking about these issues in various contexts and from various traditions are important. We have been fortunate to obtain commentaries from a range of thought leaders representing both EBM and NDM for this special issue. As we reviewed the commentaries, it became clear that there is sometimes disagreement about what EBM really is and what it implies for health care. “Critics” tend to view EBM narrowly, whereas “proponents” have a broader and more multidimensional view of EBM. It is also worth noting that many commentators draw strong links between EBM and the “best practices regimen” (i.e., initiatives and interventions that define the quality of decision making by conformance to evidence-based practices). Other contributors note that these are distinct concepts, suggesting that while managed care, health services research, implementation research, and the best practices regimen are directly influenced by classical decision theory, EBM might be characterized as restoring decision making to its “rightful place.” In some ways, this confusion rooted in the language can be seen as encouraging: There might not be as much disagreement as it appears on the surface, if one begins to discuss concepts and approaches rather than relying on labels. Nonetheless, important points of divergence are found in the commentaries. Although many would agree that EBM was never intended to constrain clinician discretion and discount expertise, there is little agreement about how EBM should be implemented. We invite you to enjoy the following commentaries. Haynes, a member of the working group that articulated a vision for evidence-based medicine in 1992 (Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group, 1992), clarifies that the “conformist principle,” “best practices regimens,” and “transductive models” are not part of EBM. Furthermore, EBM has, from its origins, been considered one of many inputs to decision making by clinicians and patients. He cautions, however, against adopting NDM practices and applications without empirical validation that this approach positively influences outcomes in real practice settings. He encourages collaboration among advocates of the sciences of NDM, knowledge translation, dissemination, and implementation. In the context of today’s discussions, Schneider reminds us of much earlier related discussions, 790084 EDMXXX10.1177/1555343418790084Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision MakingPreface to “The Role of Best Practices in Health Care Decision Making” 2018
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